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Critical Discourse Studies and Technology
A Multimodal Approach to Analysing Technoculture
Critical Discourse Studies and Technology
A Multimodal Approach to Analysing Technoculture
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Description
Making a new contribution to the developing field of multimodal critical discourse studies, Ian Roderick's book demonstrates how technologies that tend to be widely represented as innovative, or as simple pragmatic solutions, are always anchored in power relations and are therefore deeply ideological.
A series of examples analysing technologies such as robotics, smart phones or bio-medicine, their functioning and uses, as well as their representations in the media, show that these are embedded within discourses that tell us about social and power relations, identities and political values. The book takes a tour of everyday technologies and how they are represented in different settings. A Disney theme park attraction showing how technology has improved family life makes many assumptions about what is natural in terms of interpersonal relations, pleasure and satisfaction. Advertisements that represent robot workers inform us about the kinds of worker-management relations now characterising work places. Roderick looks at the way that technologies, while often represented as divorced from their production and maintenance, as objects of wonder, need to be seen within a fabric of social relations that tends to be supressed from how we see them as part of a wider technological fetishism.
Engaging with existing theories of technology, the book argues that we must take a more interdisciplinary approach to avoid the pitfalls of social constructivism and technological determinism. Our experiences of technologies are shaped through the relationship between knowledge, practices and institutional forms.
Table of Contents
2. Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis/Studies
3. Analysing Technical Discourse Through Description
4. Defining Technology: Technology as Apparatus
5. Discourses of Technology as Progress
6. Discourses of Technological Determinism
7. Discourses of Technological Fetishism: (Over)Valuing Technologies
8. Discourses of Technological (Dis)satisfications: Consuming Technologies
9. Conclusions
Index
Product details

Published | 16 Jun 2016 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 232 |
ISBN | 9781472569509 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Series | Bloomsbury Advances in Critical Discourse Studies |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Roderick (communication studies, Wilfrid Laurier Univ., Waterloo, Canada) has created an excellent, thought-provoking book that examines critical discourse studies and technology….The work's conclusion suggests that the critical discourse studies approach to the examination of technology enables a more interdisciplinary method to the study of discourse. The book has clear pictures, a useful glossary, and an extensive bibliography.
CHOICE
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Returning to Roderick's work, this timely, well-written and comprehensive 'approach to analysing technoculture' introduces important reflections for a technology-embedded world. Moreover, Roderick provides valuable tools, methods and insights for the execution of a multimodal study.
CADAAD
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This book is capturing this "multimodal" turn in an explicit, fascinating and well-supported manner.
Journal of Language and Politics
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This book is so essential – we need more books out there that use CDA/multimodal analysis to really question technology's role in society.
Theresa Catalano, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA

ONLINE RESOURCES
Bloomsbury Collections
This book is available on Bloomsbury Collections where your library has access.